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Woppi by Isabelle Scheltjens
The Gems Series
Woppi by Isabelle Scheltjens is a contemporary, figurative glass mosaic featuring a zoomed in portrait. Additionally, the works by Isabelle Scheltjens can be made in different formats. Thereupon, every piece is unique because Isabelle adjusts the composition and texture of the glass every time she creates a new work. Subsequently, this way Isabelle gives you the chance to order your favorite work according to your desired format.
Artwork Description:
- Medium: Fused Glass
- Size: 12″ W x 16″ H
- Signed on bottom corner
- Framed in a custom metal frame, ready to hang
Isabelle Scheltjens’s portraits of elegant women are heightened by their materiality. Likewise, Scheltjens crafts her headshot-like mosaics from pieces of colored glass of varying sizes and textures, which she then melts together into singular picture planes, a technique borrowed from that of her husband, artist Dirk Neefs. Specifically with Scheltjens’s pieces resembling geometric abstractions up close and from a distance crystallizing into legible portraiture. Furthermore, Scheltjens has exhibited in New York City, Paris, Hong Kong, Antwerp, Dubai, Amsterdam, and London, among others.
Description
Woppi by Isabelle Scheltjens
The Gems Series
Woppi by Isabelle Scheltjens is a contemporary, figurative glass mosaic featuring a zoomed in portrait. Additionally, the works by Isabelle Scheltjens can be made in different formats. Thereupon, every piece is unique because Isabelle adjusts the composition and texture of the glass every time she creates a new work. Subsequently, this way Isabelle gives you the chance to order your favorite work according to your desired format.
Artwork Description:
- Medium: Fused Glass
- Size: 12″ W x 16″ H
- Signed on bottom corner
- Framed in a custom metal frame, ready to hang
Isabelle Scheltjens’s portraits of elegant women are heightened by their materiality. Likewise, Scheltjens crafts her headshot-like mosaics from pieces of colored glass of varying sizes and textures, which she then melts together into singular picture planes, a technique borrowed from that of her husband, artist Dirk Neefs. Specifically with Scheltjens’s pieces resembling geometric abstractions up close and from a distance crystallizing into legible portraiture. Furthermore, Scheltjens has exhibited in New York City, Paris, Hong Kong, Antwerp, Dubai, Amsterdam, and London, among others.